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House of Sand and Fog by Andre Dubus III
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House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club) (Vintage Contemporaries)

by Andre Dubus III

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
3,15452820 (3.73)71
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Vintage (2000), Edition: Trade, Paperback, 365 pages

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Member recommendations

  1. donitamblyn recommends The Master Planets by Donald Gallinger, "This newly-released novel is another story of the way lives can be deeply affected by forces we don't understand. In HOUSE OF SAND AND FOG, we see good (see more) people turned against each other because of events beyond their control, coupled with the (uninformed) judgments they make about each other. In THE MASTER PLANETS, we see an exuberant and talented kid in 1970s America -- a kid on the threshold of realizing his dream of making world-changing music -- being derailed by events that happened 30 years before in war-torn Poland. This kind of stuff is fascinating in showing how we are really all tied together across time, distance, and culture. I must say that I much prefer the ending to MASTER PLANETS, as it gives the hope of redemption. "There is more in heaven and earth...." Interestingly enough, it's also a truly rollicking read. I couldn't put it down."
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You know when you're watching a movie and the bad guy is just the creepiest bad guy ever and you don't even want to watch the movie anymore because he creeps you out so much? (reference: Little Dorrit) And then someone always says that that's a sign of really great acting? Well, if the same is true for books then Dubus is a friggin' genius because the writing was so great that I wanted to put the book down the whole way through. Seriously folks, if Oprah endorses it then it's bound to be amongst the most depressingly soul-sucking novels ever written.

Due to a clerical error Kathy Nicolo is given minutes to move out of her childhood home, the house her father willed to her. The very next day Colonel Behrani buys it at auction for a third of it's value with plans to flip it for a profit. The Colonel was once a well respected and rich military officer in Iran until he fled to America to avoid execution. Now he is trying to regain some of the self-respect that he lost. Kathy is an ex-coke addict whose husband just deserted her. Along for the ride is Officer Lester Burdon who falls for Kathy, to his family's detriment, and will go to any length to get her her house back.

Of course, the inevitable is looming in the distance; a clash of pride and passion. The proverbial train wreck. No matter which way the pendulum swings it cannot be good. Except somehow the pace of the book got stuck on extra slow-mo. In 365 pages only about 20 of them have any action; at least, any action that made me want to stay awake to find out what happened next. Then the what-happened-next was particularly unsatisfying.

Gosh, it sounds a whole lot like another Oprah pick I dredged through once by the name of Vinegar Hill. I was more and more horrified by the idiocy of the characters and their penchant for making matters worse with each passing minute.

Clearly I hated the thing. I've heard the movie is true to the book in regards to the state it leaves the viewer in. Though I love Ben Kingsley (Love. Him.) I will give the adaptation a pass. ( )
2 vote becky_quilts | Oct 3, 2009 |
I was almost instantly drawn into the lives of these characters. The plot is unusual and well-conceived and the writing well crafted. It is not, however, an upbeat book. It tells a tale of human error, pride, and greed, but tells it well enough so that I, at least, wanted to keep going to see how it all turned out. ( )
  echaika | Sep 21, 2009 |
Wasn't really one of my favorites. I kept reading it hoping it would get better, but no such luck. All of the main characters were so selfish and immoral. It's no wonder everyone got hurt. ( )
  mehrn3 | Jul 29, 2009 |
Overwrought. ( )
  sonyau | Jul 14, 2009 |
Difficult read, was compelled to read it as it was chosen for my bookclub but under different circumstances I may have given up on it. The characters are unlikeable and difficult to relate to or sympathise with. Character development is good but too detailed. The book started off quite slowly and included copius amounts of internal dialogue by the three main characters. I definitely prefer the movie version although it is similarly somber and tragic. Throughout reading the book I kept wishing one of the characters would wake up and forsee the consequences of their selfish actions, but unfortunately they never did. ( )
  Sefarina | Jun 8, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 52 (next | show all)
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Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Beyond myself
somewhere
I wait for my arrival
-From "The Balcony" by Octavio Paz
Dedication
For my brother, Jeb, and for my four sisters, Suzanne, Nicole, Cadence, and Madeleine.

First words
The fat one, the radish Torez, he calls me Camel because I am Persian and because I can bear this August sun longer than the Chinese and the Panamanians and even the little Vietnamese, Tran.
Quotations
"Dat's what they say of this cauntry back home, Kath: 'America, the land of milk and honey.' Bot they never tell you the milk's gone sour and the honey's stolen."
"It's almost easier being down and alone than when you're up and no one's there to share the view with you."
"...wanting for just this moment to be them again, though I never had been in the first place. Not really. Not a girl with girlfriends. Now, twenty years later, I could be their mother. But I wasn't anyone's mother, or wife. I wasn't a real girlfriend to anybody, or a friend; I was barely a sister, and whenever I thought of myself as a daughter my body felt too small and filthy to live in."
"But he didn't want to get caught up in the vortex of "should have's." Regret was Fear's big sister, the one he believed should never be let in the door."
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Canonical titleHouse of Sand and Fog
Original publication date1999-02-01
People/CharactersMassoud Amir Behrani, Kathy Nicolo, Lester Burdon, Esmail Behrani
Important placesCalifornia, USA
Important eventsIranian Revolution
Awards and honorsOprah's Book Club selection (2000), National Book Award finalist (Fiction, 1999), Book Sense Book of the Year (2001.7 | Adult Fiction Honor Book, 2001)
EpigraphBeyond myself somewhere I wait for my arrival -From "The Balcony" by Octavio Paz
DedicationFor my brother, Jeb, and for my four sisters, Suzanne, Nicole, Cadence, and Madeleine.
First wordsThe fat one, the radish Torez, he calls me Camel because I am Persian and because I can bear this August sun longer than the Chinese and the Panamanians and even the little Vietnamese, Tran.
Quotations"Dat's what they say of this cauntry back home, Kath: 'America, the land of milk and honey.' Bot they never tell you the milk's gone sour and the honey's stolen.", "It's almost easier being down and alone than when you're up and no one's there to share the view with you.", "...wanting for just this moment to be them again, though I never had been in the first place. Not really. Not a girl with girlfriends. Now, twenty years later, I could be their mother. But I wasn't anyone's mother, or wife. ... (show all)
Last words(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0375727345, Paperback)

Oprah Book Club® Selection, November 2000: Andre Dubus III wastes no time in capturing the dark side of the immigrant experience in America at the end of the 20th century. House of Sand and Fog opens with a highway crew composed of several nationalities picking up litter on a hot California summer day. Massoud Amir Behrani, a former colonel in the Iranian military under the Shah, reflects on his job-search efforts since arriving in the U.S. four years before: "I have spent hundreds of dollars copying my credentials; I have worn my French suits and my Italian shoes to hand-deliver my qualifications; I have waited and then called back after the correct waiting time; but there is nothing." The father of two, Behrani has spent most of the money he brought with him from Iran on an apartment and furnishings that are too expensive, desperately trying to keep up appearances in order to enhance his daughter's chances of making a good marriage. Now the daughter is married, and on impulse he sinks his remaining funds into a house he buys at auction, thus unwittingly putting himself and his family on a trajectory to disaster. The house, it seems, once belonged to Kathy Nicolo, a self-destructive alcoholic who wants it back. What starts out as a legal tussle soon escalates into a personal confrontation--with dire results.

Dubus tells his tragic tale from the viewpoints of the two main adversaries, Behrani and Kathy. To both of them, the house represents something more than just a place to live. For the colonel, it is a foot in the door of the American dream; for Kathy, a reminder of a kinder, gentler past. In prose that is simple yet evocative, House of Sand and Fog builds to its inevitable denouement, one that is painfully dark but unfailingly honest. --Alix Wilber

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)

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